Describe Epithetical Books Homo Faber

Title:Homo Faber
Author:Max Frisch
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 228 pages
Published:May 1st 1994 by Mariner Books (first published October 1957)
Categories:Classics. Fiction. European Literature. German Literature. Academic. School
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Homo Faber Paperback | Pages: 228 pages
Rating: 3.74 | 16285 Users | 468 Reviews

Commentary Toward Books Homo Faber

Max Frischs Homo faber ist eines der wichtigsten und meistgelesenen Bücher des 20. Jahrhunderts: Der Ingenieur Walter Faber glaubt an sein rationales Weltbild, das aber durch eine ›Liebesgeschichte‹ nachhaltig zerbricht.

Define Books During Homo Faber

Original Title: Homo faber: Ein Bericht
ISBN: 0156421356 (ISBN13: 9780156421355)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Walter Faber, Sabeth, Hanna Piper, Joachim Henke, Herbert Henke
Setting: New York City, New York(United States) Houston, Texas(United States) Corinth(Greece) …more Athens(Greece) Guatemala Campeche(Mexico) Palenque(Mexico) Tamaulipas(Mexico) Havana(Cuba) Düsseldorf(Germany) Zurich (Zürich)(Switzerland) …less

Rating Epithetical Books Homo Faber
Ratings: 3.74 From 16285 Users | 468 Reviews

Column Epithetical Books Homo Faber
I had never heard of this book, or of its author, but boy am I glad I decided to buy it on a whim. It is a work that deserves to stand with Camus and Sartre in its penetration of the modern condition; an understanding of which is in each case elucidated through the perspective of a misanthrope. The protagonist, Faber, is an engineer, who is characterised by certain stereotypically male traits: he lacks empathy, and is logical and analytical to the point of inhumanity. He treats significant

Homo Faber is the concept of humans being able to control their fate and the environment through tools.Idealistic, maybe, but it becomes the fodder for Mr. Frischs last published book. It took a few pages to catch this writers rhythm but, soon thereafter, it was an easy lope to the end. This grateful reader was awed by the sublime dexterity the author employed to integrate so many themes concomitantly. Not in the patronymic way of the old Russians where we are always trying to remember the

Is everything in life a coincidence, or are things predestined for us? How much do the decisions that we make in life influence the outcome?, even down to the smallest of details?. For globe-trotting Walter Faber this is a conflict that is never really resolved, through the misadventures of a strange semi mid-life crisis, Frisch writes a poignant and sometimes shocking novel as Faber struggles to maintain his previously unwavering belief in technology, whilst human connections both past and

Homo Faber begins as an exciting adventure story: swirling snowstorms, a plane crash, stranded passengers barely surviving in a Mexican desert for four days, then unexpected journeys into uncharted ethnically dangerous Central America in search of a lost, white businessman.As the adventure proceeds, Frisch's evocation of the Mexican and Guatemalan jungle is positively Joseph Conrad, done with spare, perfect prose and pace: palpable suffocating heat, dripping sweat and humidity, torrential

And now here at last is a real book for grown-ups. Intelligent and utterly unsentimental, Homo Faber would, I feel, have been wasted on me if I'd read it ten years ago; now it strikes me as extraordinary. (This is unlike most novels, which, if not actually aimed at people in their late teens and early twenties, seem to resonate most strongly with that intense and exciting age group.)As it happens, Walter Faber, the central character of this novel, does not read novels at all. He can't see the

Warning: contains major spoilers for Sophie's WorldManfred, my inner German child, is looking even smugger and more annoying than usual. "I'm not a child any more," he informs me. "I'm grown up. I read Max Frisch's Homo Faber.""You are a child, Manfred," I sigh. "You're only three.""Three and a half," says Manfred with a little less confidence."Three and a half if you like," I agree. "And you didn't understand that book. It was too difficult for you.""Did so," says Manfred."Okay, Manfred," I

I can't believe this book is under the category "unpopular books"!!! this is one of books that have influenced me the most. The story of this man destined to become a robot, ignoring his emotions, trying to avoid suffering and depending always on logic and system, is a story of people in the 20th century. What we know now about emotional intelligence is what Max Faber lacks. If someone is interested in the depths and miseries of the human soul, he should read this book. Morover the language is

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